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The Seen and Unseen of Drinking-Age Laws by Danny Shahar Exclusive to STR August 21, 2008 Check
out a simultaneously refreshing and infuriating article about American
drinking-age laws from CNN. But
critics say McCardell has badly misrepresented the research by suggesting
that the decision to raise the drinking age from 18 to 21 may not have
saved lives. In
fact, MADD CEO Chuck Hurley said, nearly all peer-reviewed studies looking
at the change showed raising the drinking age reduced drunk-driving
deaths. A survey of research from the This
is a paradigm instance of pointing to a piece of evidence in isolation
without considering the mechanism by which it would come about. As a
22-year old who has been able to observe underage drinking in its natural
habitat for several years, I can attest to the fact that the illegality of
drinking between the ages of 18 and 21 almost certainly resulted in fewer
instances of drunk driving among people I knew. But the reason for
this has nothing to do with people within this age range drinking less.
Believe me, we drank plenty; probably a whole lot more than we would have
if we had been going to the bars and paying vastly inflated prices to get
alcohol. We messed up and damaged our parents' houses, some of us
drank until we couldn't drink any more, and some us incorporated a pretty
fair deal of pot into the process. We learned to orient our fun
around drinking; we got better at all the drinking games, and played them
more often and with greater enthusiasm as a result; we never had to worry
about what adults would think of us, since they were never around when it
happened, and so never learned to be "presentably drunk"; it
became cool to drink a lot, and to be able to drink a lot; we made friends
with the people who had the alcohol, even if they weren't always the
greatest people; luckily, I never personally had to deal with sexual
assault among my friends when I was underage, but I would imagine it's a
whole lot easier to assault someone at a high school or college house
party than it is at a bar. Danny
Shahar is
an intern at the Foundation for Economic Education. He has a B.A.
in Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and plans to
begin work on a PhD in philosophy in the Fall of 2009. Danny's
research generally falls within the fields of ethical, political, and
economic philosophy. He writes a blog called Back to the Drawing
Board.
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